
Chiefs look to make history with first Super Bowl 3-peat
The Kansas City Chiefs are on the verge of making football history.
The Kansas City Chiefs are on the verge of making football history.
While NFL teams race to hire younger coaches in search of the next Sean McVay, two defensive coordinators in their 60s are providing an important reminder in Super Bowl 59: Experience matters. In 2025, experience still wins.
In January of 2013, restaurateur Michael Garozzo went to dinner with a buddy. But as they pulled into a parking lot, Garozzo got a call – the new coach of the Kansas City Chiefs, hired two days prior, had walked into his restaurant.
I consider my daughter-in-law to be among the kindest, most even-tempered people I have met. The next time I see her angry will be the first – but then, I have never watched a Kansas City Chiefs game with her.
It’s been over a week since the Kansas City Chiefs last took the field and more than 20 days since their starters played in meaningful competition. If any rust lingers, the Chiefs will need to shake it off quickly before Saturday’s 3:30 p.m.
Bo Nix could have started planning his victory lap around halftime Sunday, but he waited until the two-minute warning to announce his intentions.
This is becoming Mike Tomlin’s worst December since the infamous “unleash hell” year of 2009.
It didn’t take Patrick Mahomes long to display the fierce competitive drive that makes him one of the premier players in the NFL.
The question on the mind of every Kansas City Chiefs fan this week is who will start at quarterback against the Houston Texans Saturday.
It doesn’t make sense, at both first glance and second glance, that the Kansas City Chiefs stand 9-0 as the NFL’s lone unbeaten team.